The Birds of Berkshire And Buckinghamshire a Contribution to the Natural Histo

Cover The Birds of Berkshire And Buckinghamshire a Contribution to the Natural Histo
The Birds of Berkshire And Buckinghamshire a Contribution to the Natural Histo
Alexander W M Clark Alexander William Maxwell Kennedy
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This Heron> which is a native of Southern Europe and Africa, can only be considered as a rare straggler to Britain.
An immature female of this species was shot near White Waltham, not far from Windsor, early in September, 1861. It was taken by the man who killed it to Mr. Hasell, one of the Windsor bird- stuffers, from whom I learnt the particulars of its capture. The Rev. L. Jenyns, in his ' Manual of British Vertebratae, ' states that the Purple Heron has been killed in Berkshire. The food of
... this bird is in all respects similar to that of its congeners, viz.
1 86 THE BIRDS OF BERKS AND BUCKS.
small fish, frogs, and insects. The Purple Heron is very retiring in its habits, preferring thick reed beds and dense swamps. The Rev. F. Morris says that as many as fifty fish have been found in the stomach of one bird.
LITTLE BITTERN (Botanrus minutus). This bird, the smallest representative of the A rdeida in Britain, is a rare summer visitor to this country ; but although so irregular in its appearance here, many examples have occurred at various times in different counties.


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